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Captain's Watch, a new condo development on Tybee Island, will have a grand opening 2-4 p.m. Oct. 24 at 1415 Butler St., across from Tybee Pier.

Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle will perform the ribbon cutting.

The event is open to the public.

The Sullivan Group hosts workshop

The Sullivan Group will present a workshop, "Hiring Practices that can Save Your Business," 9-11 a.m. Oct. 11. The workshop is open to the public and will take place at the Coastal Georgia Center, 305 Fahm St.

If you are interested in attending the seminar, contact Eileen Nuzzo at 912-961-8882 to make a reservation.

Lore, the high-end real estate magazine, distributed throughout the nation, has devoted 10 full pages to Savannah and Sea Island in its current September/October issue.

Local real estate company to partner with Wells Fargo

Cora Bett Thomas Realty & Associates, an affiliate of Christie's Great Estates, recently announced an alliance with national lender Wells Fargo Home Mortgage.

In the arrangement, a dedicated home mortgage consultant with Wells Fargo Home Mortgage will operate out of Cora Bett Thomas Realty's Savannah headquarters, at 24 E. Oglethorpe Ave. The agent will provide assistance with residential mortgages and will help make the process as streamlined as possible for buyers.

"Head Start on the Holidays," presented by JR Garrett Company Inc., a local promotions company and advertising specialties distributor, will be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. 17 at the Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites, U.S. 80 and Interstate 95.

Displays will include custom holiday gifts, foods, cards and packaging.

There will be food and refreshments, door prizes and gifts for attendees. For information, call 912-748-9719 or e-mail holiday@JRGarrett.net.

Amazon MP3, as the new section of the Web retailer's site is called, currently stocks nearly 2.3 million songs, all without copy-protection technology. Shoppers can buy and download individual songs or entire albums. The tracks can be copied to multiple computers, burned onto CDs and played on most types of PCs and portable devices.

Songs cost 89 cents to 99 cents each and albums sell for $5.99 to $9.99.

Major music labels Universal Music Group and EMI Music have signed on to sell their tracks on Amazon, as have thousands of independent labels.

- The Associated Press

The company said several labels are selling their artists' music without copy protection for the first time on the Amazon store, including Alison Krauss on Rounder Records and Ani Difranco on Righteous Babe Records.

Amazon's store competes with Apple's market-leading iTunes, which is also offering some songs without so-called digital rights management technology, which prevents unauthorized copies from playing.

Although DRM helps stem illegal copying, it can frustrate consumers by limiting the type of device or number of computers on which they can listen to music. Copy-protected songs sold through iTunes generally won't play on devices other than the iPod, and iPods won't play DRM-enabled songs bought at rival music stores.

EMusic.com Inc., another popular download site, also sells tracks in the DRM-free MP3 format but, like Amazon's store, doesn't offer music from some major labels that still require anti-piracy locks.

Bill Carr, Amazon's vice president for digital music, said it will be up to customers to use the music they buy legally.

To help stop music piracy, Carr said some record labels add a digital watermark to MP3 files that indicate what company sold the song, and Amazon adds its own name and the item number of the song, for customer service purposes. He added that no details about the buyer or the transaction are added to the downloaded music file.

"By and large, most customers just want a great, legitimate way to buy the music they want," Carr said in an interview Tuesday morning. "What the vast majority of labels believe is that they will sell more music by giving customers what they want ... by enabling DRM-free MP3, than by continuing to confuse customers or force them to choose methods that are not legal, because the legitimate alternatives are not good."

Carr characterized the number of record labels that still insist on copy-protection technology as "a handful." But David Card, an analyst at Jupiter Research, said in an interview that "having two out of four labels doesn't cut it."

Warner Music Group Corp. and Sony BMG Music Entertainment, which is owned by Sony Corp. and Bertelsmann AG, have not agreed to sell music on Amazon MP3, and Card pointed out that Universal and EMI have made only parts of their catalogs available without copy protection.

"Their catalog is going to suffer for a while," he said, referring to Amazon.

Card said Amazon's entrance into the market represents serious competition for Apple, which can no longer rely solely on the bond between the iPod and iTunes.

But, Card said: "In and of itself, (Amazon MP3) isn't enough to change any market share. They have to do a good job at building their store."

Colin Sebastian, a Lazard Capital Markets analyst, wrote in a note to investors Tuesday that he doesn't expect digital music sales to boost Amazon's profit, "given the significant contribution the company currently receives from traditional (physical) media sales, and the low margins typical with music download services, compounded by a highly competitive environment."